Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this SSN thing is a myth according to Yale FA department. they say it's used if two kids have same or easily mixed up names, which happens more than you'd think. and only in double checking stage.
agree. apparently some high school kids think it's a signal you're not applying for FA, which isn't true.
If one omits SSN and then either some college admissions gets hacked or Common App gets hacked, it is a win to omit. And everything eventually will get hacked, sadly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or it means a kid has a SSN and they’re filling out their college application?
The CA prompt explicitly says to only include SSN if applying for financial aid. It’s crystal clear folks.
No, the prompt says "Social Security Number, required if applying for financial aid via FAFSA"
Anonymous wrote:this SSN thing is a myth according to Yale FA department. they say it's used if two kids have same or easily mixed up names, which happens more than you'd think. and only in double checking stage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Yes! Hilarious. As if admissions officers are parsing things down to that level of detail 😂
Huh? They do notice that. It’s pretty obvious.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/03/well/family/how-i-know-you-wrote-your-kids-college-essay.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
This is information warfare BS from an idiot who work in admissions and can't accept the fact that the students they are admitting are smarter than the "officers" working their $12/hr workfare jobs.
It’s true though.
However, all of these top essays on the UVA website are overly contrived and heavily edited by adults. You rarely see a top college essay published these days without significant over editing and an adult voice.
I read some from the first link provided and I think they are very mediocre. They are mostly about unique activities, but not about changing. The unicycle one has changing in it but it is about weird combinations and a ton of wasted words. Certainly not great or even standout.
Hmmm. I wonder if they reject kids with essays that are too perfect?
Anonymous wrote:This is a bad take. Seeing your parents work in CS and exposing you to hackathons in 5th grade is totally great
It’s not so great to say you have an internship at Stars Hallow Realty when mom or dad works there. That’s true. But it’s totally fine to say you work there for pay. Especially if you can describe a for pay job that makes sense for your age.
Anonymous wrote:Do I need to include SSN if I plan to get unsubsidized loans?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Yes! Hilarious. As if admissions officers are parsing things down to that level of detail 😂
Huh? They do notice that. It’s pretty obvious.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/03/well/family/how-i-know-you-wrote-your-kids-college-essay.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
This is information warfare BS from an idiot who work in admissions and can't accept the fact that the students they are admitting are smarter than the "officers" working their $12/hr workfare jobs.
It’s true though.
However, all of these top essays on the UVA website are overly contrived and heavily edited by adults. You rarely see a top college essay published these days without significant over editing and an adult voice.
I read some from the first link provided and I think they are very mediocre. They are mostly about unique activities, but not about changing. The unicycle one has changing in it but it is about weird combinations and a ton of wasted words. Certainly not great or even standout.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Race
FA
Race box is irrelevant. It's no longer a data field viewable by admissions. It is included only for data collection of the enrolled class on the back end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Yes! Hilarious. As if admissions officers are parsing things down to that level of detail 😂
Huh? They do notice that. It’s pretty obvious.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/03/well/family/how-i-know-you-wrote-your-kids-college-essay.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
This is information warfare BS from an idiot who work in admissions and can't accept the fact that the students they are admitting are smarter than the "officers" working their $12/hr workfare jobs.
It’s true though.
However, all of these top essays on the UVA website are overly contrived and heavily edited by adults. You rarely see a top college essay published these days without significant over editing and an adult voice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Yes! Hilarious. As if admissions officers are parsing things down to that level of detail 😂
Huh? They do notice that. It’s pretty obvious.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/03/well/family/how-i-know-you-wrote-your-kids-college-essay.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
This is information warfare BS from an idiot who work in admissions and can't accept the fact that the students they are admitting are smarter than the "officers" working their $12/hr workfare jobs.
It’s true though.
However, all of these top essays on the UVA website are overly contrived and heavily edited by adults. You rarely see a top college essay published these days without significant over editing and an adult voice.
I can’t locate these essays. Do you have a link? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Yes! Hilarious. As if admissions officers are parsing things down to that level of detail 😂
Huh? They do notice that. It’s pretty obvious.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/03/well/family/how-i-know-you-wrote-your-kids-college-essay.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
This is information warfare BS from an idiot who work in admissions and can't accept the fact that the students they are admitting are smarter than the "officers" working their $12/hr workfare jobs.
It’s true though.
However, all of these top essays on the UVA website are overly contrived and heavily edited by adults. You rarely see a top college essay published these days without significant over editing and an adult voice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I listened to that podcast bc it was recommended here. It was a waste of an hour. I laughed out loud when he said 2 spaces after a period will give away that a parent edited the essay.![]()
Yes! Hilarious. As if admissions officers are parsing things down to that level of detail 😂
Huh? They do notice that. It’s pretty obvious.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/03/well/family/how-i-know-you-wrote-your-kids-college-essay.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
This is information warfare BS from an idiot who work in admissions and can't accept the fact that the students they are admitting are smarter than the "officers" working their $12/hr workfare jobs.